Most people don’t realise that in the UK, straightening teeth and correcting bite problems can legally be carried out by any registered dentist — not only by an orthodontist. So when you’re researching treatment in Winchester, “orthodontist” and “dentist who offers orthodontics” can look almost identical at first glance. They are not the same thing, and the difference is worth understanding before you commit to treatment.
Under the Dentists Act, every registered dentist in the UK is permitted to provide orthodontic care as part of their general practice. Plenty do, and plenty do it with care and good intent. What the Act doesn’t do is distinguish between a clinician who has fitted a few sets of aligners alongside crowns and fillings, and one whose entire working life is built around moving teeth and guiding facial and jaw growth.
That distinction is what the protected title “specialist orthodontist” exists to mark — and why the General Dental Council maintains a separate register for it.
A specialist orthodontist is a fully qualified dentist who has then completed an additional three-to-five-year, full-time programme of postgraduate training under direct consultant supervision, focused exclusively on orthodontics. This is not a weekend course, a manufacturer’s certification, or a self-paced online programme. It is university and hospital based, taught and assessed by senior orthodontists, and built around treating real patients in a clinical environment.
The training programme ends with a demanding set of examinations. Candidates must present a portfolio of completed cases — starting records, treatment mechanics, finishing photographs and models — to an independent panel of examiners. In the UK that panel sits within the Royal College of Surgeons. Cases that fall short are not passed. The whole structure exists for one reason: making sure clinicians who carry the title can diagnose accurately, plan effectively, and finish predictably.
Postgraduate orthodontic programmes are heavily research led. Trainees spend a significant share of their time learning to read and critically appraise the orthodontic literature — what the evidence supports, where it is genuinely strong, and where confident marketing has outpaced the science.
That matters more than it sounds. Orthodontics has no shortage of appliances, brackets and “systems” promoted with bold claims and polished branding. Patients rarely see how those claims are filtered behind the scenes, but they quietly benefit when their clinician has been trained to question new products rather than simply adopt them.
For straightforward alignment cases, an experienced general dentist may achieve a perfectly acceptable result. The gap between general and specialist care becomes more visible — and more clinically important — in cases such as:
A specialist orthodontist treats only orthodontic patients, every working day, year after year. That depth of focused, repeated experience is what allows the more complex pieces of a case to be assembled correctly the first time.
This part is straightforward, and we’d encourage every patient to do it before starting treatment anywhere.
To use the title “specialist orthodontist” in the UK, a clinician must hold a recognised postgraduate orthodontic qualification — typically the Membership in Orthodontics (MOrth) or Fellowship in Dental Surgery in Orthodontics (FDS Orth) — and appear on the GDC’s specialist list for orthodontics. You can check anyone’s status, including ours, on the public register: olr.gdc-uk.org/searchregister.
Where a clinician is offering orthodontic treatment but doesn’t appear on that list, they are not a specialist orthodontist and are not entitled to describe themselves as one. Most dental colleagues respect that line. A small minority don’t, and as a patient you have every right to ask.
Picking where and with whom to have orthodontic treatment is a personal call, and any good clinician — specialist or general dentist — will support you in making it on the strength of the facts, not pressure. If you’d like a second opinion, or you’d like to find out whether specialist input would meaningfully help in your particular situation, we’re glad to talk it through with you at Winchester Orthodontic Centre. No obligation, no commitment to treatment, just an honest conversation.
Search the General Dental Council’s online specialist register at olr.gdc-uk.org/searchregister. If a clinician holds specialist status in orthodontics, their name will appear on the orthodontics list. If they don’t appear, they are not a specialist orthodontist under UK law — regardless of how the role is described on their website or signage.
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My son has had a fantastic experience with Winchester orthodontist. The staff are always friendly, helpful, communicative. Clear line of chat and always willing to help and adjust apts around his scho… Read More
I started Spark aligners at Winchester Orthodontic Practice about 10 weeks ago and I’ve already seen a big improvement. Shelby has been brilliant and the rest of the team have been fantastic, friend… Read More
It took me a long time to find an orthodontist who actually listened to my aims and agreed to work with me to help me achieve the teeth and smile I was trying to find. My experiencees in 4 years of s… Read More
Very friendly, knowledgeable and efficient!! We have used Winchester Orthodontic Practice for mine, my husband and all my children's teeth. 100% recommend
They’ve done an excellent job with correcting my bite and they were all really accommodating and welcoming. I would recommend them to anybody looking for orthodontic treatment.
Winchester Orthodontic Practice is a trading style of Winchester Smiles Limited who are authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA No 987490). Finance is subject to availability, status and income, applicants must be 18 or over. Terms and Conditions apply. Registered office: Chester House, Lloyd Drive, Ellesmere Port, England, CH65 9HQ.
All finance is subject to availability, status and income.